It Must Be Magic Explained
It Must Be Magic |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Teena Marie |
Cover: | Tmarie.jpg |
Released: | May 14, 1981 |
Recorded: | 1980–81 |
Length: | 44:30 (original release) 63:37 (expanded edition) |
Label: | Gordy |
Producer: | Teena Marie |
Prev Title: | Irons in the Fire |
Prev Year: | 1980 |
Next Title: | Robbery |
Next Year: | 1983 |
It Must Be Magic is the fourth studio album by Teena Marie, released on May 14, 1981. It was her last album for Motown and the highest-selling of Marie's tenure with Motown. The album peaked at No. 2 on the US Black Albums chart and No. 23 on the Pop Albums chart.
Lead single "Square Biz" became her most commercially successful for the label - peaking at No. 3 on Billboard's Black Singles chart and No. 12 on Billboard's Club Play Singles, while performing moderately on Billboard's Pop Singles, peaking at No. 50, becoming her second single to chart on the Pop Singles chart. This was followed up by No. 30 US Black Singles success for the title track, featuring label mates The Temptations, and the Quiet storm classic "Portuguese Love".
Like Irons in the Fire, it was fully written and produced by Marie herself, and received a positive critical reception, earning the album a nomination for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance at the 1982 Grammy Awards.
In 2002, the album was re-released in a remastered and expanded CD edition containing three additional tracks (two of which were recorded during a live concert in Long Beach, California).
Track listing
All songs written by Teena Marie, except where noted.
- "It Must Be Magic" – 6:03
- "Revolution" – 4:27
- "Where's California" – 5:24
- "365" – 4:10
- "Opus III (Does Anybody Care)" – 1:27
- "Square Biz" (Marie, Allen McGrier) – 6:40
- "The Ballad of Cradle Rob and Me" (Marie, Jill D. Jones) – 3:24
- "Portuguese Love" – 7:17
- "Yes Indeed" – 4:57
Bonus tracks - 2002 Expanded Edition
- "Square Biz [Instrumental]" – 6:40 (expanded edition)
- "Someday We'll All Be Free" (Donny Hathaway/Edward Howard) – 1:57 (expanded edition - live recording)
- "Déjà Vu" (Rick James) – 12:26 (expanded edition - live recording)
Personnel
- Teena Marie - Lead and Backing Vocals, Synthesizer
- Patrice Rushen, Scott Markus DeTurk, James S. Stewart Jr. - Keyboards
- Allen McGrier, Oscar Alston, Charles A. Glenn Jr. - Bass
- Tom McDermott, Josef Andre Parson - Guitar
- Paul Hines - Drums
- Bill Wolfer,[1] Allen McGrier - Synthesizer
- Lloyd Lindroth - Harp
- Daniel LeMelle - Saxophone
- Gerald Albright - Saxophone, Tenor Flute
- John Ervin - Trombone, Flute
- Eric Butler, Kenneth Scott - Trumpet
- Cliff Ervin, Roy Poper - Piccolo Trumpet[2]
- Rick James, Diedra Joseph, Glenn Carl Leonard, Jackie Ruffin, Jill D. Jones, Melvin Franklin, Mickey Boyce Hearn, Otis Williams, Julia Waters, Maxine Waters, Pattie Brooks, Anthony Brockert, Christopher Anthony Boehme, Diedra Joseph, Dwayne Wedlan, Ginny Pallante, Grayland Taylor, Ray Townsend - Backing Vocals
Charts
Year-end charts
Singles
Year | Single | Chart positions[5] |
---|
US | US R&B | US Dance |
---|
1981 | "Square Biz" | 50 | 3 | 12 |
"It Must Be Magic" | — | 30 | — |
1982 | "Portuguese Love" | — | 54 | — |
|
Later Samples
- "Square Biz"
- "Portuguese Love"
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Bill Wolfer | Credits. AllMusic.
- Web site: It Must be Magic - Teena Marie | Credits | AllMusic . .
- Top Billboard 200 Albums – Year-End 1981. Billboard. 2 January 2013. April 12, 2021.
- Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums – Year-End 1981. Billboard. 2 January 2013. April 12, 2021.
- Web site: [{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=p4844/charts-awards/billboard-singles|pure_url=yes}} Teena Marie US singles chart history]. allmusic.com. May 30, 2011.